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Creating Your Home Studio – manufacture a Small Space Work For You
Nov 4th
Net Krafter : Creating Your Home Studio – manufacture a Small Space Work For You
Let’s face it. Most of us crafters don’t revel in the luxury of having a room of our own. Some of us live in studio apartments and change a tiny armoire into our whole creative center. Others live in four bedroom homes we share with our husbands, children and pets and clear off the dining room table nightly to craft our wares. It’s all we can do to find a spot to settle in and get comfortable adequate to get our creative juices flowing. When I first began, I started out beading on my couch. Beads would roll off of my pad and into the cracks, and I didn’t even have a semblance of club in place. I was storing my beads in the bags that came from the shop I bought them in, willy nilly and in no single order. It was exasperating!
It goes without saying, using one small area for so many purposes is nearly impossible without having an ideas of club in place. While I dream of having a room dedicated to my craft, with a separate area for each of the functions I have to accomplish and handy spools of wire and chain at my fingertips, I have to face facts. I don’t have this room. In the predominant words of Tim Gunn (Project Runway, yes I am addicted) I had to “Make it work!”
My settle to “Make it work” was something I came to when I made the decision to turn my creative hobby into a business. I knew I could no longer uncomfortably bead on the couch if I was at all serious about being successful. Here’s what I’ve done with a small (and very multipurpose) area of the two bedroom flat my husband and I rent.
We have the luxury of having a sun room in our flat with windows facing north, west and south. The room is filled with beautiful, natural light and is the excellent space for creating and photographing my jewelry.
Being so spacious and well lit, I decided to set up my home studio here. I had previously bought a small desk from Ikea for the sole purpose of my having a space of my own to do homework (again, instead of the predominant couch!) I get a ton of use out of this one inexpensive desk. Paying bills, beading and wirework, a staging area for my product photography, photo editing, working on the laptop and making ready packages for the mail.
I also have a printer and some small file storage next to the desk, I use the one small drawer to store my company cards and misc. Items, and make good use of the lowest cubby to store my printer paper and fulfilled, product.
Luckily, jewelry is small so my fulfilled, product currently shop up nicely in a microscopic shoebox sized tote I bought, in small Ziploc style baggies to keep them safe.
Our sun room is also the main room in our flat for tantalizing and watching movies. Therefore, we happen to have a television and media town in the room. I speedily commandeered this particularly roomy cabinet and now use it for all my storage purposes. I use the lowest left area for storing my beads, tools, wire, stationery and cards. For the beads and tools themselves, I have several cases I store them in neatly and nicely, a vast correction on enduringly pulling things in and out of a paper bag to find what I’m seeing for.
The right side is dedicated to my props for photography, bubble mailers, jewelry boxes and a bag full of miscellaneous items like ribbon and jewelry hang tags. I also have some display items for craft shows stashed in the far back.
Don’t be fooled by my photos, my area is often a mess of papers all over the desk, half-finished projects and errant beads I’ve pushed off to one side. However, my microscopic space of organized chaos is serving me well in staying refreshed and creative. From what I’ve done with this small space, I’ve learned a few things. Here are my top five tips for organizing a creative space for yourself at home.
1) Organize, organize, organize. Invest in some ideas of club either it be totes, storage containers, a closet system, etc. Ikea has many wonderful and inexpensive options for storage and I extremely advise getting your items as organized as possible.
2) Keep it clean. When I want to transition from creating pieces to photographing them, I put away all my beads and tools before pulling out any of my props and photo items. Doing this instantly transforms the space into an area dedicated to the task at hand. You don’t want to be tripping over your beads or limit yourself to a very small area to work at. Conversely, I take all the papers and junk Off of my desk before I pull out my beads. I want to spread out as much as possible. Trust me, dedicating the space to what you are doing by keeping it clean will help not only in your creative process but it helps mentally as well. I feel jangled and vexed when there is too much junk lying around. It clears the mind, to say the least.
3) In the club ideas you choose, keep dedicated items away from each other. Have a spot for photography props, other spot to store mailing items, other spot for your inventory of creative supplies. This in fact helps with time, you know right where to go and just what to grab when everything is in order.
4) Good lighting. Make sure you have the best lighting potential in your space. If you don’t have good natural light, Invest in some full spectrum bulbs or some specialty craft lighting (Ott lights are extremely recommended.) When I used to bead on the couch, I once made a necklace of what I understanding were matching glass beads. Turns out some beads were pink, and some were peach. It was a mess. I curse that couch situation! Get yourself the proper lighting, you won’t regret it.
5) Enjoy! There’s nothing more satisfying than claiming a space of your own for your craft. You deserve it, and it will be key in keeping you happy and stress free. When I beaded on the couch and out of a paper bag I often found myself avoiding the act of creating because it was such a hassle and I’d get entirely stressed by the beads rolling colse to on me. I also made more mistakes and created items too gradually because of the environment. You owe it to yourself, even if your family has to eat evening meal on the living room floor because you took over the dining room table permanently. Take something for yourself, don’t feel guilty and enjoy it fully!
Creating Opportunities For eBay Based business
Sep 3rd
Net Krafter : Creating Opportunities For eBay Based business
The internet has made it very easy for habitancy all over the world to be very associated to one another and this has greatly increased the store size. An eBay based business is done online and with the expansion of the internet market, it has opened doors for greater opportunities with habitancy trying to originate one where there is none. Thus, anyone having a computer that is associated can take benefit of this new development and occasion to go into eBay based business themselves. Let’s see what this eBay site is all about.
The term eBay is used to refer to shopping or an auction site online, where many habitancy are seen selling and buying a huge variety of products and services on daily basis. In this market, there is a kind known as “buy it now” which want can go for and there you can and buy anyone you want to buy. In this same website, you can as well find bidding and auction systems. So eBay has indeed come to be the real destination for online shopping because it enables habitancy to have access to a large estimate of products and as well get thoughprovoking reduction coupled with hassle free shipping.
The eBay website is being managed by eBay Inc. This business also manages other websites such as PayPal and Skype. In the eBay website, millions of products are sold which may contain furnishings, equipments, decor, varied collectibles, appliances, vehicles, computers, and other miscellaneous items that are bought, numbered, and sold o daily basis on this website. On the other hand, there are items that are not permitted to be sold or advertised here such as burglar tools, tobacco, drugs, explosives, live animals, firearms or such weapons, copyrighted things and others.
This eBay based business site can allow habitancy to originate their own business opportunities. What you need to start with to make this eBay based business lucrative is a miniature interest, diligence and ingenuity. Though you may need product and services, there are still other ways of getting items that one can sell on this site. But you can grab the following opportunities:
1. Selling Personal Items: you can start by selling uncomplicated personal items for an eBay based. Many persons who are succeeding today started somehow like this. Within a short period you will come to realize how much behalf you have made so far.
2. Estate/Yard Sales: some habitancy have discovered their own occasion by visiting estate and yard sales, even junk shops in crusade for items that can sell. After learning the sites coupled with the buying habits of the users, then it can later on tend to come to be a profitable venture.
3. Personal product Sales: there are some habitancy who furnish their own products such as cloths makers, crafters, artists and many more. Those habitancy can take the benefit of an eBay based business occasion to make their products known to millions of possible buyers at the same time. It is just true that one can originate his own opportunities in an eBay based business.
Check Out Signature Style: Creating Beautiful Interiors for $9.02
Jul 24th
Signature Style: Creating Beautiful Interiors Review
Signature Style: Creating Beautiful Interiors Overview
We’ve turned the hottest decorating magazine into the year’s hottest book! Discover timeless Traditional Home inspiration from eight of America’s premier interior designers. This book takes traditional style to a new level by breaking with staid, prescriptive decorating. The individualist’s approach to design shines-as expressed in bold colors, sophisticated neutrals, contemporary flair, updated American classics, Continental and French flourishes, contemporary edges, singular artwork, and relaxed traditional spaces. Major, new projects from eight renowned, imaginative interior designers. Lavish, all-color photography. Profiles of designers, including their singular design philosophies and preferences. Inspired ideas about scale and proportion, color, fabrics, furniture, antiques, collections, art, and other essential design details. Comprehensive design sources.
Signature Style: Creating Beautiful Interiors Specifications
There’s more to decorating a home well than simply selecting furniture and accessories for each room. A well-dressed home has a certain flair throughout that’s stylish and inviting. That sense of style unfortunately doesn’t come naturally to most people, so Signature Style aims to help you learn from those who have it in spades. The book features eight American designers, each of whom has a distinctive sense of style, and all of whom are masterful in their approach to interior design.
Charles Faudree, for instance, specializes in combining French and English touches, such as toleware and Staffordshire figures. This artful mix of European high style and country brings warmth, comfort, and class to all of his rooms. Gary McBournie, on the other hand, brings a very American look to his homes with rag rugs, New England furniture, and antique handmade quilts, while also incorporating European and Asian pieces. Mary Douglas Drysdale melds neoclassical design with modern pieces and throws in her trademark detail of antique weathervanes; Kely Amen, on the other hand, favors the use of bold color over accessories. Other designers whose works are profiled include Thomas Bartlett, Paula Perlini, Kelly Amen, Douglas Rasar, and Alessandra Branca.
This assemblage of designers brings an impressive amount of training and knowledge to their field–many have classical training at prestigious interior design schools, as well as backgrounds in art, art history, and architecture, and formative experiences in other countries. But the proof is in their designs, and the result is always breathtaking.
Well written and laid out, this beautiful book is checkered with plentiful, large color photos of each designer’s work. The editors have done a superlative job of selecting some fine American designers to feature in the book–each of these artists brings a timeless yet unique style to his or her work. Readers of Signature Style would do well to take some cues from the designers featured when trying to formulate their own signature style. –Kris Law
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Related Products
- Great Traditional Style (Better Homes & Gardens Decorating)
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- Southern Style
- Decorating Idea Book (Idea Books)
- Romantic Style: Lovely homes, pretty rooms, gentle settings (Better Homes & Gardens)
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Creating A Title Page For Your Scrapbook
Dec 23rd
When I create a scrapbook, I always leave the first page blank. I start my scrapbooking on page two, knowing I’ll come back and create a title page.
The title page is the introduction to the scrapbook. I’ve always thought of this page as being similar to a book cover. The book cover gives you the title of the book.
Here are three ideas for a title page:
1. Use two or three photos that represent what’s inside. For example, if the scrapbook is about a person, then use a few photos of that person on the title page. If the scrapbook is about extended family, then a family photo would be great on the title page. If the scrapbook is of a trip, then maybe a photo of the “Welcome to Name Of Town” sign would be great on the title page.
2. Another idea for a title page is to just put words. For example, if you are making a baby book for your child, what about just the child’s name and the date of birth on the title page? If your book is photos of a holiday, consider putting the name of the holiday and the year on your title page, for example “Thanksgiving 2002″. Words can be accompanies by stickers. For example on the baby album, what about stickers of rattles? On the Thanksgiving page, what about stickers of turkeys and yams?
3. Poems or song lyrics also make great title pages. Maybe the album is of a wedding. The couple’s favorite song lyrics would make a great title page. Maybe you are making a school days album and your child wrote a poem. You can either copy the poem onto acid free paper, or you can type the poem, print it on acid free paper and use that as your title page.
Audrey Okaneko has been scrapbooking for several years. She can be reached at audreyoka@cox.net or visited at http://www.scrapping-made-simple.com
Creating a Summer Camp Scrapbook
Dec 20th
When my daughter goes to camp, she knows I’ll be asking her 100 questions when she comes home. This past summer she was gone for an entire month and I’m certain my questions numbered over 100.
Prior to digital cameras being so popular, I always would buy many disposable cameras so that she was able to capture photos of everything she did and everywhere she went. Even today, in the age of digital photography a disposable underwater camera is a wonderful investment.
We discovered the camp my daughter attended this past summer through her attending a one week program earlier in the year. When she attended the one week program the camp gave the kids their summer camp information. We saved those brochures for the beginning of her camp scrapbook.
As the months progressed, we began getting both postal mail and email from the camp about the summer ahead. We saved all of those communications so they could be copied onto acid free paper.
Each week my daughter was gone, the camp leader sent parents an email update of what the kids had done that week. There were also photos added to the camp website that parents could download. On my end, I was saving all of this for inclusion in the summer camp scrapbook.
Meanwhile my daughter was taking photos of the places she visited and the people she was with. She also kept a small journal so she could answer my countless questions when she returned.
In addition to taking photos of the other kids she was with, my daughter also took photos of the many counselors and other camp staff that supported the program while she was there.
For younger children attending day camp, ask if you can spend a bit of time taking photos. I know one of our local camps has a teen counselor who takes photos daily and uploads them to the camp website so the parents can download them for their personal use.
Camp is a lot of fun for kids. Capture that fun through photos and a camp scrapbook!!
Audrey Okaneko has been scrapbooking for several years. She can be reached at audreyoka@cox.net or visited at http://www.scrapping-made-simple.com
Creating a Scrapbook For Your High Schooler In Band
Dec 19th
I have such fond memories of my daughter spending her high school years in the marching band. I admit to wondering who had more fun, my daughter performing or her mom cheering her on at each performance.
Over the years, we have found quite an assortment of scrapbook papers, stickers and embellishments that were designed with a music theme.
You have the option of creating one scrapbook with all four years worth of photos or four separate scrapbooks, one for each year.
From talking with other parents, I have found most music programs are the same. The kids start out before school ever gets under way with band camp. This is where they begin to learn the music and begin to choreograph their show. You can make a copy of the marching drill on acid free paper and also a copy of the music being used for their show for your scrapbook.
As performances begin, you can snap a few photos of each performance. If your band performs at football games, see if you can snap a photo of the other team, so that you’ll have a reference about which game the performance took place at.
As the competition season begins, again snap a photo of the location of the competition. My daughter is several years post high school and she will still speak of a particular competition naming the location where the competition took place.
Most competitions had programs available. Those can be copied onto acid free paper and put right into the scrapbook.
During award ceremonies, photos of your group accepting an award are a must. This is also a great time to snap some photos of the rest of the group sitting in the stands.
Some scrapbooks require more journaling than other scrapbooks. A band scrapbook does require a bit more journaling as many of the photos are taken from far away, and the kids all look the same in uniform. If you have a small notebook and pen, jot down the names of the kids in the photos you’ve taken.
If the kids and/or families get together for a social event, snap a few photos. It’s fun to see the kids out of uniform also.
If you can, get a few photos of the kids in the band room at school. After all, this is where it all begins.
Audrey Okaneko has been scrapbooking for several years. She can be reached at audreyoka@cox.net or visited at http://www.scrapping-made-simple.com
Creating a One of a Kind Birthday Scrapbook
Dec 9th
I believe each of us at one time or another has been faced with what to give as a gift to the “impossible to buy for” person.
Over the years I’ve often seen the small booklets that say “if you were born in 1959″, or “if you were born in October of 1959″. I’ve always marveled at how many of these books are available and are sold.
Thus the idea of a scrapbook of birth was formed. The information contained in those booklets can easily be put into a special birthday scrapbook which of course would also include both photos and journaling.
Today, the internet makes it very easy to research any particular day, month or year. What a wonderful gift for the recipient to receive a scrapbook filled with data about the day, month and year they were born. Here are a few ideas of items to include:
News events – Choose a few news events from the day, the month and the year the person was born. You can find scrapbook paper that resembles newsprint. Then, using your computer, either scan in the news items you’ve found, or copy and paste them to fit on the scrapbook paper the way you’d like them to fit.
Other birthdays – Find famous people who were also born the same day, month and/or year. Include some photos of the folks who were also born during this time.
Prices – I’ve been able to find the average price of homes, bread and butter for the year I was born. With a bit of research, you should be able to find the average prices of the year of the scrapbook recipient.
Home and Family – See if you can find a photo of the first home the recipient lived in. Or possibly a map showing the street the person lived on. What about an “about the city” from the city the person was born in? If the hospital the person was born at is still in existence, see if you can get a photo of the hospital to include in the scrapbook. Ask another relative if they have a few photos they can give to you of the scrapbook recipient and his/her family. You can also include a page that resembles a family tree and write in the names of the parents and children if you know them.
These are just a few ideas of items you can include in a very personalized unique birthday scrapbook.
Audrey Okaneko has been scrapbooking for several years. She can be reached at audreyoka@cox.net or visited at http://www.recipe-barn.com
Creating a Scrapbook From Your Cruise
Nov 23rd
For many, sailing away on a cruise is the end result of a years worth of planning. Start taking those photos the day you start planning.
How did you find out about the cruise? Make copies of the literature that led you to book this particular cruise.
Did you read about the many port cities the cruise ship will stop at? Do you have brochure or internet photos of these cities? Again, make copies and include them in your scrapbook.
I know whenever I travel I never seem to have the right clothing. I am always shopping for just the right outfits to take with me. It is fun to take photos at home of the outfits purchased and include these photos in the “getting ready” section of the scrapbook.
When I renew my passport, I save the receipt and make a copy on acid free paper. This can be added to one of your scrapbook pages.
Once on the cruise, the photo opportunities are non stop until you return back home. Photos can be taken of the entire ship. The buffets are often almost too beautiful to eat from. Photos of chocolate buffets are wonderful conversation starters, over and over again.
As you land in each port, capture as much of the city as you can by camera. If you find brochures about places visited, grab the brochures for inclusion in your scrapbook. Postcards are also great for capturing photos you might not be able to capture yourself.
I personally love people photos. I always take photos of other people. On a cruise, you may or may not continue a relationship with those you meet on board. Use a small notebook to write down names and basic details of those you’ve met. If you don’t continue the relationship, those notes will come in handy when you view the photos 2 years later.
Whether on board or on land, carry your camera with you, so you can capture everything you wish to capture. Bon Voyage!!
Audrey Okaneko has been scrapbooking for several years. She can be reached at audreyoka@cox.net or visited at http://www.scrapping-made-simple.com






